Temple
Israel was originally known
as Shaarai Tov, "The Gates
of Goodness." Organized in
1878, it was Minneapolis's
first Jewish congregation.
The 23 men who were the founding
members rented a hall at Nicollet
and Washington Avenues for
Friday night worship services,
and taught Sunday School classes
in the president's home. By
the time they built their
first synagogue two years
later--a small, Moorish-style
wooden building on 5th Street
and Marquette Avenue--the
Hebrew Ladies Benevolent Society,
established in 1877, had changed
their name to Shaarai Tov
Sisterhood. Their original
purpose had been to care for
the sick, prepare the dead
for burial, and help new immigrants
and the Jewish poor, but now
they also sponsored lectures,
recitals, dances, dinners
and bazaars to raise money
for their new synagogue.
In 1888, Shaarai Tov members
moved their building to the
corner of 10th Street and
5th Avenue South. When it
burned down in 1902, the congregation,
still less than 100 families,
built a new stone synagogue
on the site at a cost of $18,000.
Growth and change during
the Deinard era
Early rabbis at Shaarai Tov
made many changes in the traditional
Orthodox style of worship.
Neither the rabbi nor his
congregants covered their
heads to worship, Confirmation
for 16-year-olds replaced
the traditional Bar Mitzvah
at age 13, and there was a
new English-Hebrew prayer
book. When Rabbi Samuel N.
Deinard was hired at a salary
of $2,000 per year in 1901,
more changes came, and came
quickly.
Rabbi Deinard mailed postcards
to members urging them to
attend Friday evening services
and bring their friends, who
were captivated by his scholarly
sermons and the Americanized
religious service. He grew
up in Palestine and he urged
the community to help Jewish
pioneers who wanted to settle
there. He founded the Twin
Cities's weekly newspaper,
the American Jewish World,
and acted as a peacemaker
between Orthodox Jews arriving
from Eastern Europe and the
German Jews and older settlers
already in Minneapolis. By
1907, 125 families were members
of Shaarai Tov, with 100 students
in Sunday School and Hebrew
classes.
By now the city's population
was on the move. People began
building houses in the area
between Lyndale and Humboldt,
and 26th Street and Franklin
Avenue. In 1914, with their
congregation growing and 200
students in religious school,
Shaarai Tov paid $14,000 for
a community house at 24th
and Emerson to use for classrooms
and offices, and rented the
Lyceum Theatre for services
on Rosh Hashanah,
the Jewish New Year.
In 1920, the congregation
changed its name to Temple
Israel. On Oct. 12, 1921,
Rabbi Deinard died of a heart
attack, just as Temple members
gathered to observe the holiest
day of the year, Yom Kippur,
the Day of Atonement.
The Minda years: members
working together
The stricken congregation
chose Albert G. Minda, from
South Bend, Indiana, as their
new rabbi. He had been ordained
just three years earlier,
but he too was an innovator
and quickly became a community
leader. He revised the Religious
School curriculum and set
up joint teacher training
with Mount Zion Temple in
St. Paul. He encouraged young
men in the congregation to
start a Men's Club. The congregation
continued to grow and, under
Rabbi Minda's leadership,
a new edifice was built. On
Sept. 1, 1928, Temple Israel
members attended the inaugural
service of the new synagogue,
designed by architect Jack
Liebenberg. The Temple's pillared
facade on Emerson Avenue,
the site of the former community
house, reflects Greek influence
on early Judaism. The five
doors represent five books
of the Torah--Genesis, Exodus,
Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy.
Twelve columns in the sanctuary
signify the twelve tribes
of ancient Israel, acanthus
leaves in the organ grilles
are a reminder of the Jews'
suffering as slaves in Egypt,
and the windows are dedicated
to the Creation, the Patriarchs,
Exodus, the Temple, the Prophets,
and post-Biblical ideals of
one world and one humanity.
The synagogue seats 950 people
in its sanctuary of unusual
acoustical excellence, and
a smaller chapel across the
hall is dedicated to Rabbi
Deinard.
Then, in 1929, came the Great
Depression. The congregation
had borrowed $150,000 on pledges
from members to build their
new $225,000 Temple and now
many could not pay their pledges
or their dues. And so the
"Rigadoo" was born, a weekend
carnival where Men's Club
and Sisterhood solicited sale
goods and prizes. In five
years "Rigadoo" netted $25,000,
enough to save Temple and
its credit rating.
Bridges with the past and
the community
People came to Temple Israel
to hear Rabbi Minda's thought-provoking
sermons, and he also appealed
to his congregants' emotions
by building new bridges between
contemporary Judaism and its
tradition-filled past. At
Friday night services, the
Kiddush--the blessing
over the wine--was chanted
and Sabbath candles were lit.
On Rosh Hashanah,
the shofar, a ram's
horn, was blown. A choir and
a cantor sang liturgical music.
At the Oneg Shabbat
reception after services,
Sisterhood members served
desserts and coffee.
Rabbi Minda also expanded
Temple's involvement in the
community. He joined clergy
at neighboring churches in
educational programs and fought
racial and religious prejudice
as a founder of the Minneapolis
Urban League and the Minneapolis
Round Table of Christians
and Jews. In 1940 he established
a Jewish art gallery and museum
on the Temple premises. A
religious school addition
was built in 1955.
He was a founder and the first
president of the Minneapolis
Federation for Jewish Service
(now the Minneapolis Jewish
Federation). He was president
from 1961 through 1963 of
the Central Conference of
American Rabbis, the governing
body of the Reform Jewish
Rabbis. Among other honors,
he received the United Fund
of Hennepin County Distinguished
Service Award and the Minneapolis
Mayor's Distinguished Service
Award.
In 1940, Sisterhood members
began a statewide Library
of Congress braille transcribing
and training program to provide
books for the blind. Meanwhile,
Temple's Boy Scout Troup No.
10, which continued for more
than 30 years, went camping
on Minnehaha Creek and played
basketball in Temple Israel's
unfinished basement. Camp
TEKO began as a day camp in
1945, with campers going swimming
at Lake Nokomis until the
Men's Club purchased and developed
a campsite at Lake Minnetonka
in 1965 for the use of Camp
TEKO. It has become a vital
part of Temple's education
program, not only as a day
camp, but as an overnight
camp and adult program center.
By 1954 many Temple members
were attending Adult Learning
classes in Bible, Hebrew,
Jewish history and other topics.
In 1958, a daily 5:45 p.m.
Worship Service in Deinard
Chapel began, conducted by
volunteers for those who wanted
to commemorate the death of
a family member or friend.
In 1960, under Jerry Robbins's
leadership, Temple began inviting
church groups to attend Friday
evening services and learn
about Temple's history and
Jewish art and ceremonial
objects. Other programs begun
in the '60s and '70s included
Couples Club and New Horizons,
a pioneer in programming social
and cultural events for active
seniors.
"Personal rabbi" in an
era of change
In 1963, Rabbi Minda retired
and was succeeded by Rabbi
Max Shapiro, who had come
to Temple in 1955 as Assistant
Rabbi.
Rabbi Shapiro introduced such
innovations at Temple as reading
Torah on Friday evenings,
the Bar/Bat Mitzvah
program, liturgical tracts
to modernize the Sabbath and
High Holy Day services. He
increased the role of women
in worship services and expanded
the educational programs begun
by Rabbi Minda.
Rabbi Shapiro's approach to
congregation members was personal.
It was said that he knew the
names of each of the congregants
and always greeted them with
warmth and affection. His
goal was to make a large congregation
seem small.
Rabbi Shapiro encouraged Temple's
Social Justice Committee to
speak out on civil rights
issues and help resettle Vietnamese
refugees and Soviet Jews.
An Outreach Committee worked
with those who wanted to learn
about Reform Judaism. Interfaith
Committee members dialogued
with Christian congregations,
organized interfaith seders
and, along with five neighborhood
churches, developed the Neighborhood
Involvement Program to provide
medical and dental care, counseling,
tutoring, food, clothing and
other services to people in
need. Under his initiative,
Temple Israel joined six churches
in an annual Thanksgiving
Service.
It was a turbulent time for
the country and the Twin Cities.
Rabbi Shapiro spoke out on
the issues of the day: desegregation,
civil rights, civil liberty,
Vietnam, anti-Semitism and
more. His sermons were published
in the American Jewish
World and excerpts appeared
regularly in the Minneapolis
Tribune. Rabbi Shapiro
had a prominent career in
local and national activities.
He was a founder and president
of the Minnesota Council on
Religion and Race, served
on the State Commission Against
Discrimination and the Minneapolis
Committee on Fair Housing.
He also represented Minnesota
at the funeral of Martin Luther
King, Jr. and represented
the Jewish community at the
funeral of Senator Hubert
H. Humphrey. He went to Washington
for the formation of the Urban
Coalition and was invited
by President Carter to the
signing of the Israel-Egyptian
Peace Treaty.
By 1985 Temple Israel's membership
had reached 1,850 families,
making it the 10th largest
Reform Jewish congregation
in North America. Rabbi Shapiro
was named Rabbi Emeritus of
Temple Israel on June 30,
1985. He became the first
Director of the Center for
Jewish-Christian Learning
at the University of St. Thomas
in St. Paul. Under his leadership
the Center has become nationally
and internationally known.
A return to tradition--and
a woman rabbi
Beginning in 1985, Rabbi Stephen
Pinsky continued Temple's
tradition of involvement in
the larger community. He taught
Jewish history at Augsburg
College, served on the Board
of Minnesota's new International
Treatment Center for Victims
of Torture and on a national
Rabbinic Commission on Synagogue
Music.
He was also part of a national
movement toward a more traditional
style of worship with more
Hebrew in the service, more
emphasis on ritual and more
Hebrew and Jewish education
for children and adults. During
his tenure, Temple hired its
first woman rabbi, Marcia
Zimmerman, and its first fully-trained
cantor, Barry Abelson. A major
building addition in 1987
added a new entrance on the
parking lot, a 250 seat theater,
meeting rooms and offices,
and elevators to make Temple
handicapped-accessible.
In 1992, Rabbi Joseph Edelheit
came to Temple Israel from
Chicago, Illinois. He, too,
focused on education and on
interfaith and social issues,
as well as on continuing the
move toward more traditional
Friday night worship. He led
a joint congregational tour
of Israel for members of Temple
Israel and the Basilica of
St. Mary and served on the
Presidential Advisory Council
on HIV/AIDS during the Clinton
administration. Congregants
of all ages attended Rabbi
Edelheit's innovative Saturday
morning Torah Study sessions,
and enrollment continued to
grow in Religious School,
Hebrew School, Nursery School
and Day Care.
Temple
Israel's Library is now
a resource for scholars
studying the history of
Judaism and Minneapolis's
Jewish community. Yom
Kippur worship has
grown to include a special
Memorial Service and the
Book of Remembrance,
which lists the departed
we remember. The congregation
now numbers over 2,000 families,
and Temple continues to
be what architect Jack Liebenberg
called "an unfinished symphony,"
welcoming change as it continues
to focus on worship, learning,
integrating children and
adults into a Jewish way
of life, and on the need
to be part of the community
in which we live.
A bright
future In 2001, Rabbi Zimmerman became Senior
Rabbi of Temple Israel, becoming the first woman Senior Rabbi
of a congregation of over 2,000 families. She has led our
historic congregation through exciting events during her tenure. The
UAHC held its Biennial in Minneapolis in 2003. Our congregation
beautifully renovated our magnificent sanctuary, and celebrated
our 125th anniversary. Temple's halls are filled with Jewish
learning, spirituality and culture, just as the congregation
has had for over a century, and just as it will continue to
have for many years to come.